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. 2021 Feb 15;73(5):842–849. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciab140

Table 2.

Univariable and Multivariable Drivers of Cluster Growth (Incident Infection Defined as Estimated Date of Infection ≤1 Year of Sequencing Date)

Predictora Univariable Model Multivariable Model
Coef Coef SE HR (95% CI) P Value Coef Coef SE HR (95% CI) P Value
Proportion of incidentb 5.27 0.66 194.87 (53.09–715.20) <.001 3.76 0.48 43.09 (16.90–109.86) <.001
Cluster size 0.32 0.01 1.37 (1.33–1.41) <.001 0.29 0.01 1.33 (1.29–1.37) <.001
Proportion of Hispanic ethnicityb –0.35 0.14 0.70 (.53–.92) .011 –0.46 0.19 0.63 (.43–.92) .017
Median No. of sex partnersc –0.01 0.01 0.99 (.98–1.01) .289
Cluster start pre-2005d 0.90 0.15 2.45 (1.81–3.31) <.001 0.35 0.17 1.42 (1.02–1.97) .036
Median age of clustere –0.05 0.01 0.95 (.93–.97) <.001 –0.04 0.01 0.96 (.94–.97) <.001
Proportion of unsuppressedb 0.52 0.12 1.69 (1.33–2.14) <.001 0.30 0.16 1.35 (.98–1.86) .069

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; Coef, coefficient; HR, hazard ratio; SE, standard error.

aAll predictors use clusters as the reference for evaluation.

bProportion as decimal, not percentage. For example, an increase in the proportion of incident infections from 0 to 50% would correspond to HR of exp(0.5 × 3.76) = 6.55, with the other predictors held constant.

cMedian number of sex partners in the past month at time of enrollment for each linked case.

dTime invariant.

eMedian age of cluster, which includes median ages of all individuals in cluster, up to but not including the individual linked at latest event time.